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FoxTrot Classics by Bill Amend for September 02, 2010
Transcript:
Andy: Oh, Peter- on your way, would you mind returning these books to the library? Peter: You just checked these out two days ago. You're giving up that quickly? Andy: No, no- I finished them all. Peter: Why couldn't the school assign my summer readings list to her?? Jason: You got through another page last night, I noticed.
rayannina over 14 years ago
Egads, Andiâs as bad as me!
ejcapulet over 14 years ago
Oh yeah, âCatcher In The Ryeâ - the name still makes my stomach hurt. I taught myself to skip the bleeps so, if you add that to how fast I read, I tore through it in record time (quick pain is better than slow torture). When I had to give a report on it, I told the prof exactly what I thought of it and he actually gave me an âAâ for calling it a âload of psychotic bilgeâ and saying that âHeart of Darknessâ was downright sane in comparison.
phydeaux44 over 14 years ago
Good grief. Schools which assigned âCatcher In The Ryeâ! I ended up with Knowlesâ âA Separate Peaceâ and considered it a crashing bore. If anyone had suggested âCatcherâ, he or she probably wouldâve been dragged out and stoned.
sottwell over 14 years ago
I had to read âCatcher In The Ryeâ, âLook Homeward Angelâ and âPortrait of the Artist As A Young Manâ. I was being abused at the time, and wasnât really into the âfree loveâ bleeep that the ivory-tower uber-intellectuals were spouting in the mid-60s. I noted in my report that none of the boys in the books had a pet, and that studies had shown that pets helped children develop a sense of responsibility and kept them from drifting into trouble. I got a D- for the semester, and was publicly sneered at for my negative, reactionary attitude, which according to the teacher was the only problem the people in the books had. Indiscriminate screwing around isnât a problem, but guilt brought on by other peopleâs wrong attitudes is.
sottwell over 14 years ago
An interesting side point that I ran across while researching the whole issue of juvenile sexuality and psychosis. Freud based most of his ideas of childhood sexuality and Oedipal complexes on the case of a young girl, the daughter of a wealthy noble of some kind. She insisted he was abusing her, and sharing her with his wealthy, powerful friends. Nothing âcuredâ her of this delusion, not even shock treatments. When the father died, a couple of dependent relatives admitted that they all knew he really was abusing her, but since they were dependent on his money they none of them would come forward to defend the child. Freudâs whole premise was based on a fraud.
Just like Margaret Mead, who sat in the shade of her hotelâs porch and based her âComing Of Age In Samoaâ on paid interviews with a couple of teenaged runaway girls who hung around the hotel picking up whatever âodd jobsâ they could. Later they said it was a real hoot, telling the stupid foreign woman the most outrageous things they could think of. It was quite a joke around the whole island. As far as I know, even though this came to light several years ago, thatâs still required reading in anthropology courses.
Sandfan over 14 years ago
One of my English Lit teachers assigned âThe Return of the Nativeâ by Thomas Hardy. I still have nightmares.
GeraldTarrant over 14 years ago
Canât be worse than having to read âAs I Lay Dyingâ for school.
legaleagle48 over 14 years ago
Hmm â there was a time when âCatcher in the Ryeâ was considered the Bible of the young, and primarily because it was considered racy reading material for that era!
And folks, letâs not forget that Andi was an English major in college. Of course sheâs going to be a voracious bookworm!
Yukoneric over 14 years ago
I am writing this slowly because I know you do not read very fast .
davidf42 over 14 years ago
I loved Catcher In The Rye. Iâm surprised at yâall not liking it. Now if you want to read something booooring, try Moby Dick. Iâm convinced itâs only still in print because the teachers still insist that itâs a âclassicâ whatever the heck that means.
phydeaux44 over 14 years ago
Well thank goodness. I thought I was the only one who considered Moby Dick to be a bit on the turgid side. It has a good plot, and some excellent characterizations, but a good editor shouldâve seriously taken a blue pencil to Melvilleâs text.
treBsdrawkcaB over 14 years ago
âLess Than Zeroâ was the worst! Worthless drivel trying an old, hackneyed formula in an attempt to be sensationalistic. Intellectual vomit!
kab2rb over 14 years ago
My my for me when a kid from school never assigned reading books. Summerâs where kinda boring, though rode bikes, mom never took us to libraries, sheâs not ilterate just doesnât like to read. My sister can read but doesnât like to she like doing those number puzzleâs or sewing. There getting ready for state fair after Labor Day.
I donât read that fast Paige how did you find time with especially one brother always bother you.
Smiley Rmom over 14 years ago
After reading a couple of âclassicsâ to my (homeschooled) family, and finding them extremely boring, I changed my SOP. Now I read them to myself, and THEN if I think they are reasonably interesting, Iâll assign them or read them aloud to the family.
jackmatt over 14 years ago
How about Dickens for classic drudgery? Great characterizations, but ooohhh how it driveled on (as I remember nodding off about every third sentence and had to start over). Anything by Steinbeck was my favorite lit class adventure - somehow rang true and seemed relevant.
MisngNOLA over 14 years ago
I had to read The Color Purple, Slaughterhouse 5, and Catch-22 in high school. I missed out on all the fun of Catcher In The Rye, and The Scarlett letter, and The Crucible. Perhaps thatâs why I still enjoy reading.
WallyCuppaJoe over 14 years ago
Loved Catch 22.
JasonFoxIsMyHero over 14 years ago
What was/is really good is the âHunger Gamesâ trilogy. Fast reading, nice story. As for drudgery, â20,000 Leagues Under the Seaâ was horrible.
phydeaux44 over 14 years ago
Just looked up the âHunger Gamesâ trilogy and it sounds interesting. Iâm thinking you might enjoy Julian Mayâs âSaga Of Pliocene Exileâ.
notinksanymore over 14 years ago
I donât get itâŠI read most of the books mentioned in the comics voluntarily, and really enjoyed them! It takes me three days to read eight books, though I bet if they were short books (less than 500 pages) I could squeeze eight into two. How nice to have a new challenge!
Weâre in the third week of the semester at my law school, and Iâve already read several of the textbooks cover to cover. That really tells you everything you need to know about me.
MisngNOLA over 14 years ago
notinks, it tells me youâd never make it as a politician.
josh_bisbee over 14 years ago
My HS never had a summer reading list
doctorwho29 almost 6 years ago
Iâve never understood these jokes. I usually read pretty quickly so I donât know what the big deal is
Zarus over 5 years ago
When it comes to reading, this is my mother. No exaggeration.